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MakefileD22-Nov-2023638 264

README.TXTD22-Nov-20233.8 KiB11378

main.cppD22-Nov-20233.9 KiB12984

translit.slnD22-Nov-20231.2 KiB2625

translit.vcxprojD22-Nov-202313.5 KiB255254

translit.vcxproj.filtersD22-Nov-20231.2 KiB3333

unaccent.cppD22-Nov-20231.7 KiB6132

unaccent.hD22-Nov-20232.9 KiB9419

util.cppD22-Nov-20232.2 KiB6845

util.hD22-Nov-2023858 214

README.TXT

1Copyright (C) 2016 and later: Unicode, Inc. and others.
2License & terms of use: http://www.unicode.org/copyright.html#License
3
4Copyright (c) 2002-2010, International Business Machines Corporation and others. All Rights Reserved.
5
6
7IMPORTANT:
8
9This sample was originally intended as an exercise for the ICU Workshop (September 2000).
10The code currently provided in the solution file is the answer to the exercises, each step can still be found in the 'answers' subdirectory.
11
12
13
14  http://www.icu-project.org/docs/workshop_2000/agenda.html
15
16  Day 2: September 12th 2000
17  Pre-requisite:
18  1. All the hardware and software requirements from Day 1.
19  2. Attended or fully understand Day 1 material.
20  3. Read through the ICU user's guide at
21  http://www.icu-project.org/userguide/.
22
23  #Transformation Support
24  10:45am - 12:00pm
25  Alan Liu
26
27  Topics:
28  1. What is the Unicode normalization?
29  2. What kind of case mapping support is available in ICU?
30  3. What is Transliteration and how do I use a Transliterator on a document?
31  4. How do I add my own Transliterator?
32
33
34INSTRUCTIONS
35------------
36
37This exercise was developed and tested on ICU release 1.6.0, Win32,
38Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0.  It should work on other ICU releases and
39other platforms as well.
40
41 MSVC:
42   Open the file "translit.sln" in Microsoft Visual C++.
43
44 Unix:
45   - Build and install ICU with a prefix, for example '--prefix=/home/srl/ICU'
46   - Set the variable  ICU_PREFIX=/home/srl/ICU and use GNU make in
47        this directory.
48   - You may use 'make check' to invoke this sample.
49
50
51PROBLEMS
52--------
53
54Problem 0:
55
56  To start with, the program prints out a series of dates formatted in
57  Greek.  Set up the program, build it, and run it.
58
59Problem 1: Basic Transliterator (Easy)
60
61  The Greek text shows up almost entirely as Unicode escapes.  These
62  are unreadable on a US machine.  Use an existing system
63  transliterator to transliterate the Greek text to Latin so it can be
64  phonetically read on a US machine.  If you don't know the names of
65  the system transliterators, use Transliterator::getAvailableID() and
66  Transliterator::countAvailableIDs(), or look directly in the index
67  table icu/data/translit_index.txt.
68
69Problem 2: RuleBasedTransliterator (Medium)
70
71  Some of the text is still unreadable and shows up as Unicode escape
72  sequences.  Create a RuleBasedTransliterator to change the
73  unreadable characters to close ASCII equivalents.  For example, the
74  rule "\u00C0 > A;" will change an 'A' with a grave accent to a plain
75  'A'.
76
77  To save typing, use UnicodeSets to handle ranges of characters.
78
79  See the included file "U0080.pdf" for a table of the U+00C0 to U+00FF
80  Unicode block.
81
82Problem 3: Transliterator subclassing; Normalizer (Difficult)
83
84  The rule-based approach is flexible and, in most cases, the best
85  choice for creating a new transliterator.  Sometimes, however, a
86  more elegant algorithmic solution is available.  Instead of typing
87  in a list of rules, you can write C++ code to accomplish the desired
88  transliteration.
89
90  Use a Normalizer to remove accents from characters.  You will need
91  to convert each character to a sequence of base and combining
92  characters by applying a canonical denormalization transformation.
93  Then discard the combining characters (the accents etc.) leaving the
94  base character.  Wrap this all up in a subclass of the
95  Transliterator class that overrides the pure virtual
96  handleTransliterate() method.
97
98
99ANSWERS
100-------
101
102The exercise includes answers.  These are in the "answers" directory,
103and are numbered 1, 2, etc.  In some cases new files that the user
104needs to create are included in the answers directory.
105
106If you get stuck and you want to move to the next step, copy the
107answers file into the main directory in order to proceed.  E.g.,
108"main_1.cpp" contains the original "main.cpp" file.  "main_2.cpp"
109contains the "main.cpp" file after problem 1.  Etc.
110
111
112Have fun!
113